System for utilizing wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information to describe cross-connection capabilities in optical networks

ABSTRACT

A system for communicating cross-connection information within an optical network by use of wavelength information is provided. Cross-connection information in Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) devices is abstracted, to produce wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information for each node within the optical network. Cross-connection information is distributed from one node to all other nodes or a Path Calculation Equipment (PCE), through extended routing protocols, providing a base for calculating service paths.

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to optical network communications, and more particularly, to a versatile system for utilizing wavelength reachable information to describe cross-connection capabilities in optical networks.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

An Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON) is a type of dynamically and automatically switched transport network. It's a new generation optical network, where: a service request is originated dynamically by users; a path is calculated and selected automatically by a network element; setup, restoration and clearance of a connection are controlled by signaling; and switching and transporting are integrated. An ASON includes two layers: a control plane and a transport plane. Main functions of a control plane include: collecting and distributing network topology of an ASON; forming a “network map” describing network topology; calculating a viable path through routing algorithms and by use of the “network map”, and establishing an intelligent circuit using a signaling protocol for each node on the path. Functions of a transport plane include setting up or deleting cross-connections on each network element, and establishing or withdrawing services on the transport plane, according to instructions from a control plane.

Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) is a technology to transport services with various wavelengths. Rapid increases of image and data services cause tremendous demands for network bandwidth, and the conventional WDM technology is intended to meet such bandwidth demands. A WDM device can be divided into a long-distance WDM device and a metropolitan WDM device. A long-distance WDM device is commonly used as a national trunk or a regional trunk, for long-distance and high-capacity transmissions. A metropolitan WDM device is mainly used for data service transmissions in rapidly developing metropolitan networks. Traditional WDM networks are point-to-point static networks. However, the emergence of Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop Multiplexer (ROADM)/Wavelength Selective Switching (WSS) technology makes dynamic WDM networks possible; so that vendors are able to provide new services, and add or modify network services dynamically, without the need to redesign networks. In addition, combining WDM devices and ASON technology can reduce operational expenditures.

However, because of certain optical limitations existing in WDM devices and due to low integrity, cross-connection constraints may exist in WDM devices (i.e. there may be blocking in wavelength switching of WDM devices), which may not be like Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH), where one channel may be easily cross-connected to another. Cross-connection constraints cause problems in path calculations in an ASON. Moreover, in a WDM network, sometimes it may not be possible to establish a wavelength service between two nodes that are reachable in topology and have resources available.

Previous solutions have provided abstract models to determine reachability information between access points of a network; thus, solving certain blocking and constraint problems in pure photonic Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching (GMPLS) network sub-domains. For example, in an abstract model, a pure photonic GMPLS network may be abstracted into a logical or abstract cloud, and reachable information among access points of a Generalized Label Edge Router (GLER) is abstracted. With this abstract model, less information is distributed among GLER nodes. Due to insufficient information distributed, however, a label set would have to be used to restrict selection of wavelengths at setup time. Thus, even if such a restriction is applied, the rate for establishing a successful service path is low.

In another abstract model, a Generalized Label Switching Router (GLSR) node in a pure photonic GMPLS network may be abstracted into a logical/abstract GLSR node, and reachable information of links associated with a logical GLSR node is abstracted and distributed to other nodes. Information involved in this abstract model is large, but relatively complete. Therefore a higher rate of successful path calculations may be obtained when compared with the first model. In a WDM network, however, although a link may be reachable, it does not necessarily mean that wavelength is reachable. Thus an established service path may not necessarily be viable. For this reason, a crankback technology may need to be used, to repeatedly attempt to establish a service path.

Therefore, such conventional methods may not produce correct service path calculations. This can greatly decrease service setup efficiency, especially in cases where a service is restored after interruption. Repeated attempts are intolerable, because a new path should be computed and a service should be re-established as soon as possible. Another drawback is caused by high frequency of information distribution, since a link's reachability changes once a service is established, and such information must be updated in real-time, and distributed through out a whole network. This in turn, places a large demand overhead on a network.

Another conventional method typically configures services manually and statically using a network management system. For less powerful network management systems, manually designed configurations may be created and then distributed station by station. Powerful network management systems normally collect cross-connection capabilities and cross-connection constraints of each WDM device, and then calculate an appropriate path after considering the collected information.

However, manually designing and distributing configuration services is cumbersome, time-consuming and difficult to maintain. Moreover, automatically calculating service paths is similar to a centralized ASON, which is unsafe, heavy in network management system workload, and is difficult to reroute services dynamically.

Therefore, there is a need to overcome cross-connection constraint issues in a WDM device for an intelligent WDM network. There is also a need to provide correct service path calculations, and to decrease information distribution workload.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a system, comprising various constructs and methods, for communicating cross-connection information within an optical network, using wavelength information. The present invention abstracts the cross-connection information to produce wavelength reachability information, and wavelength occupation status information, for each node within the optical network, and distributes the wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information of each node to all other nodes, or a Path Calculation Equipment (PCE) of the optical network, through extended routing protocols.

The present invention provides wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information to describe cross-connection capabilities and constraints in wavelength division multiplexing devices, carries the information by adding some new fields in routing protocols, such as an Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), and distributes wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information separately using the routing protocols. This decreases the amount of information distributed, improves network efficiency, and provides a base for feasible service path calculations in case of cross-connection constraints.

The present invention is further applicable to communicate sub-wavelength reachability information and sub-wavelength occupation status information.

The following description and drawings set forth in detail a number of illustrative embodiments of the present invention. These embodiments are indicative of but a few of the various ways in which the present invention may be utilized.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

For a more complete understanding of the present disclosure and its advantages, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals represent like parts:

FIG. 1 is a diagram of a wavelength division multiplexing device illustrating cross-connection capabilities and cross-connection constraints among a plurality of traffic engineering links.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The following discussion is presented to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the invention. The general principles described herein may be applied to embodiments and applications other than those detailed below without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined herein. The present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.

In the present invention, cross-connection capabilities of a Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) device may be abstracted into wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information. The wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information may be distributed over a WDM network through a routing protocol, such as an extended Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol; and may serve as a base of service path calculations for intelligent routing algorithms, so that wavelength services/sub-wavelength services may be automatically established or restored. The present invention effectively solves problems where difficulty exists in calculating service paths in a WDM network with cross-connection constraints, and facilitates an intelligent WDM network.

According to the present invention, a resource management system: acquires cross-connection capabilities and constraints of a WDM device; abstracts the acquired cross-connection information into wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information; and stores the wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information into a local data structure when the system is initialized. The resource management system updates wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information in real-time when cross-connection capabilities and constraints of the WDM device change.

A number of embodiments of obtaining wavelength reachability information are described hereafter. Since resources are represented and distributed in the form of Traffic Engineering links (TE links) in an ASON, wavelength reachability information may describe the reachability between all wavelengths of one TE link and that of the other TE links on the same device.

FIG. 1 illustrates an example of a WDM device (100), with cross-connection capabilities and cross-connection constraints among a plurality of TE links. WDM device (100) has four Fiber Interface Unit (FIU) boards (110), (120), (130) and (140), connected to fibers located in four directions. WDM device (100) has two upper/lower Optical Transponder Unit (OTU) boards (150) and (160), which are reachable to East and West, respectively, through internally connected fibers. Each FIU is connected with one Wavelength Selective Switching Multiplexer (WSSM), and with one Wavelength Selective Switching Demultiplexer (WSSD); and the WSSD of one FIU is connected to WSSMs of the other three FIUs. Each OTU is connected with one multiplexer (MUX) and one demultiplexer (DMUX). MUX (155) is connected with WSSM (112); DMUX (157) is connected with WSSD (111); MUX (165) with WSSM (132); and DMUX (167) with WSSD (131).

Signals traveling through a fiber come into or go out of WDM device (100) via a corresponding FIU. An optical signal on a fiber in the East is sent to WSSD (111) after being received by FIU (110), and the optical signal may be routed to WSSM (122), WSSM (132) or WSSM (142), where it may be output via FIU (120), FIU (130) or FIU (140), respectively. Alternatively, the optical signal may be routed to DMUX (157) for demultiplexing, and output via OTU (150). Signals coming in through the West fiber may be processed similarly. A signal may be received by FIU (130), sent to WSSD (131), and routed to WSSM (112), WSSM (122), WSSM (142) or DMUX (167), where the signal may be output via FIU (110), FIU (120), FIU (140) or OTU (160). Signals from the South fiber may be input through FIU (120), sent to WSSD (121), routed to WSSM (112), (132) or (142), and sent out via corresponding FIU (110), (130) or (140). Signals from the North fiber may be input through FIU (140), sent to WSSD (141), routed to WSSM (112), (122) or (132), and sent out via FIU (110), (120) or (130).

OTU (150) may convert wavelength of an input signal, and pass the input signal to MUX (155) for multiplexing. The multiplexed signal may be sent to WSSM (112) to be output via FIU (110). Similarly, OTU (160) may convert wavelength of an input signal and pass the input signal to MUX (165) for multiplexing. The multiplexed signal may be sent to WSSM (132) as output via FIU (130).

In this example, each fiber transmits 40 waves, each having a wavelength λ1-λ40, respectively. OTU board (150) works at a fixed wavelength λ1, and OTU board (160) works at a tunable wavelength, which may be adjusted in the range of λ1-λ40.

FIG. 1 depicts an illustrative example. In practical applications, multiple diverse cross-connection constraints may exist in a WDM device—such as what is illustrated in FIG. 1, where fibers in the four directions may not necessarily be all cross-connected, and wavelength converted through an OTU board may not necessarily go in only one direction. All such cross-connection constraints or cross-connection capabilities are comprehended by the present invention.

FIG. 1 illustrates six TE links generated from nodes of WDM device (100), named TEL1-TEL6. According to FIG. 1, TEL1 may reach TEL2, TEL3 and TEL4 at wavelength λ1-λ40, and may reach TEL5 at only wavelength λ1. However, TELL may not reach TEL6. TEL2 may reach TEL1, TEL3, and TEL4 at wavelength λ1-λ40. Similarly, wavelength reachability information for each TE link may be determined, as shown in Table 1 to Table 6.

TABLE 1 Wavelength Reachability of TEL1 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL1 TEL2 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL3 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL4 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL5 λ1

TABLE 2 Wavelength Reachability of TEL2 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL2 TEL1 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL3 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL4 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40

TABLE 3 Wavelength Reachability of TEL3 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL3 TEL1 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL2 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL4 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL6 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40

TABLE 4 Wavelength Reachability of TEL4 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL4 TEL1 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL2 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40 TEL3 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40

TABLE 5 Wavelength Reachability of TEL5 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL5 TEL1 λ1

TABLE 6 Wavelength Reachability of TEL6 TE Link Described Reachable Link Reachable Wavelength TEL6 TEL3 λ1 λ2 . . . λ40

The wavelength reachability information depicted above may be stored locally in an appropriate data structure, and reported to a routing sub-system for resource distribution.

A number of embodiments of obtaining wavelength occupation status information are described hereafter. Wavelength occupation status information describes whether wavelength resources of TE links are free, or occupied by a certain service. In the beginning, all wavelength resources are free. Wavelength occupation status changes as services are established and deleted. For example, if, at a certain time, wavelength λ1, λ1 and λ3 of TEL1 in FIG. 1 are occupied, and the other wavelengths are free, then wavelength occupation status information of TEL1 may be described as shown in Table 7.

TABLE 7 Wavelength Occupation Status of TEL1 Wavelength Occupation TE Link Described Wavelength Status TEL1 λ1 Occupied λ2 Occupied λ3 Occupied λ4 Free . . . Free λ40 Free

In implementation, whether a wavelength is free or occupied may be represented by 0 and 1, respectively.

Thus, cross-connection capabilities and constraints may be described using wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information. Wavelength reachability information is relatively fixed—that is, once board configuration is made, and internal optical fiber connections are determined for a WDM device, wavelength reachability generally does not change. Wavelength reachability information may be updated in operation, when boards are added or removed, or when internal fiber connections are changed. That is, wavelength reachability information may be updated when optical network resources change.

Wavelength occupation status varies as services are established or deleted, and thus it may change relatively more often. Abstraction and distribution of resource occupation status information are a necessary part in an optical device, even in a fully cross-connected device, such as an SDH device. Using wavelength reachability information according to the present invention, together with wavelength occupation status information, cross-connection capabilities of a WDM device, where cross-connection constraints exist, are now clearly described. Furthermore, the relative stability of the wavelength reachability information saves bandwidth of a network control plane, and provides a solution with lower cost and higher efficiency.

After cross-connection capabilities of each node are abstracted into wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information, the wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information may be distributed to all nodes, or to a Path Calculation Equipment (PCE), of a network, through an OSPF protocol or similar routing protocols; such that each node or PCE in the network has knowledge of wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of all nodes, serving as a for correct routing calculations.

If OSPF protocol is used as a routing protocol, wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information may be distributed via Link-State Advertisement type 10 (LSA10) (i.e. TE LSA) of OSPF. A link_TLV in LSA10 of OSPF describes details of all TE links that are related to one node. A TLV contains multiple sub_TLVs, such as link type sub_TLV, link ID sub_TLV, etc.

To distribute wavelength reachability information, one embodiment is to add a sub_TLV into link_TLV to describe wavelength reachability information of each TE link, which is named link reachability sub_TLV. The link reachability sub_TLV may contain wavelength reachability information of all TE links related to one TE link of a node, including number of reachable TE links, index of each reachable TE link, and reachable wavelengths. The sub_TLV may have a format of:

Each field is defined as follows:

S: a master/backup flag of a TE link; 0 represents master and 1 backup.

reachable_link_num: number of TE links reachable by a TE link.

link1_if_index: index of the first reachable TE link of a TE link.

reachable_lambda_num: number of reachable wavelengths of a TE link.

Lambdan_value: value of the n^(th) wavelength that is reachable by a TE link.

To distribute wavelength occupation status information, one embodiment is to provide a BandWidth_TLV. The BandWidth_TLV describes bandwidth and other related information of a corresponding TE link. A sub_TLV may be added in the BandWidth_TLV to describe wavelength occupation status information of a corresponding TE link, which is named Lambda_status sub_TLV. The Lambda_status sub_TLV has a format of:

Each filed is defined as follows:

lambda_number: number of wavelengths of a TE link.

Lambdan_value: value of wavelength λn of a TE link.

Lambdan_status: occupation status of wavelength λn of a TE link. One bit may be used to represent whether a status is free or occupied. In real implementations, each bit of the four bytes for Lambdan_status may be used to represent a designated status.

By adding TLVs as described above, OSPF protocol may be used to distribute cross-connection capabilities of each node to every other node, or to a PCE, within a network, by way of wavelength reachability and wavelength occupation status information. Wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information may be provided in link_TLV and BandWidth_TLV, respectively, encapsulated in separate LSA10, and distributed separately. Thereby network workload is reduced and network efficiency improved. Service paths in a WDM network may be calculated using wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information.

The present invention is applicable not only to wavelength reachability distribution of TE links, but also to sub-wavelength reachability distribution. Cross-connection constraints exist in sub-wavelength service dispatching, which are also comprehended by the present invention.

The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art and generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein. 

1. A method for communicating cross-connection information within an optical network, by use of wavelength information, comprising the steps of: abstracting cross-connection information of at least one node in the optical network; and distributing the cross-connection information of the at least one node in the optical network.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information comprises cross-connection constraints or capabilities.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of abstracting further comprising: obtaining cross-connection information for the at least one node; abstracting the cross-connection information of the at least one node; and storing the cross-connection information of the at least one node.
 4. The method of claim 3, further comprising updating the cross-connection information of the at least one node when optical network resources change.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the optical network comprises an Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON).
 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising distributing the cross-connection information of the at least one node to at least one other node within the optical network.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising distributing the cross-connection information of the at least one node to at least one Path Calculation Equipment (PCE) of the optical network.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information of the at least one node is distributed utilizing routing protocols.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the routing protocols comprise an Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol.
 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information of the at least one node is abstracted to produce wavelength reachability information.
 11. The method of claim 10, wherein a Link-State Advertisement (LSA) in an open shortest path first protocol is adapted to distribute the wavelength reachability information.
 12. The method of claim 11, wherein a link reachability sub_TLV is provided in a link_TLV of an LSA10, containing the wavelength reachability information.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the link reachability sub_TLV comprises number, index, and reachable wavelengths of reachable traffic engineering links.
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information of the at least one node is abstracted to produce wavelength occupation status information.
 15. The method of claim 14, wherein a Link-State Advertisement (LSA) in an open shortest path first protocol is adapted to distribute the wavelength occupation status information.
 16. The method of claim 15, wherein a BandWidth_TLV is provided in an LSA10, containing the wavelength occupation status information.
 17. The method of claim 16, wherein a lambda_status sub_TLV is provided in the BandWidth_TLV, describing the wavelength occupation status information.
 18. The method of claim 17, wherein the lambda_status sub_TLV comprises number, value, and status of wavelengths of a corresponding traffic engineering link.
 19. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information of the at least one node is abstracted to produce sub-wavelength reachability information.
 20. The method of claim 1, wherein the cross-connection information of the at least one node is abstracted to produce sub-wavelength occupation status information.
 21. A method for communicating cross-connection information within an optical network, by use of wavelength information, comprising the steps of: abstracting cross-connection information of at least one node in the optical network to produce wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information; and distributing the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of the at least one node in the optical network.
 22. The method of claim 21, further comprising abstracting the cross-connection information of the at least one node to produce wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of at least one corresponding Traffic Engineering (TE) link.
 23. The method of claim 21, wherein the cross-connection information comprises cross-connection constraints or capabilities.
 24. The method of claim 21, wherein the optical network comprises an Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON).
 25. The method of claim 21, further comprising distributing the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of the at least one node to at least one other node within the optical network.
 26. The method of claim 21, further comprising distributing the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of the at least one node to at least one Path Calculation Equipment (PCE) of the optical network.
 27. The method of claim 21, wherein the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of the at least one node is distributed utilizing routing protocols.
 28. The method of claim 27, wherein the routing protocols comprise an Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol.
 29. The method of claim 28, wherein Link-State Advertisements (LSAS) in the open shortest path first protocol is adapted to distribute the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information.
 30. The method of claim 21, wherein the wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information are distributed separately.
 31. The method of claim 21, further comprising abstracting the cross-connection information of the at least one node to produce sub-wavelength reachability information and sub-wavelength occupation status information.
 32. A system for communicating cross-connection information within an optical network, comprising: a plurality of nodes within the optical network, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts cross-connection information, and distributes the cross-connection information to at least one other node in the optical network; and at least one routing subsystem, adapted to calculate service paths using the cross-connection information.
 33. The system of claim 32, wherein the cross-connection information comprises cross-connection constraints or capabilities.
 34. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information by obtaining the cross-connection information; abstracting the cross-connection information; and storing the cross-connection information.
 35. The system of claim 34, wherein each of the plurality of nodes updates the cross-connection information when optical network resources change.
 36. The system of claim 32, wherein the optical network comprises an Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON).
 37. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information to produce wavelength reachability information and wavelength occupation status information of a corresponding traffic engineering link.
 38. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes distributes the cross-connection information to at least one Path Calculation Equipment (PCE) of the optical network.
 39. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes distributes the cross-connection information utilizing routing protocols.
 40. The system of claim 39, wherein the routing protocols comprise an Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol.
 41. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information to produce wavelength reachability information.
 42. The system of claim 41, wherein a Link-State Advertisement (LSA) in an open shortest path first protocol is adapted to distribute the wavelength reachability information.
 43. The system of claim 42, wherein a link reachability sub_TLV is provided in a link_TLV of an LSA10, containing the wavelength reachability information.
 44. The system of claim 43, wherein the link reachability sub_TLV comprises number, index, and reachable wavelengths of reachable links.
 45. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information to produce wavelength occupation status information.
 46. The system of claim 45, wherein a Link-State Advertisement (LSA) in an open shortest path first protocol is adapted to distribute the wavelength occupation status information.
 47. The system of claim 46, wherein a BandWidth_TLV is provided in an LSA10, containing the wavelength occupation status information.
 48. The system of claim 47, wherein a lambda_status sub_TLV is provided in the BandWidth_TLV, describing the wavelength occupation status information.
 49. The system of claim 48, wherein the lambda_status sub_TLV comprises number, value, and status of wavelengths of a corresponding traffic engineering link.
 50. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information to produce sub-wavelength reachability information.
 51. The system of claim 32, wherein each of the plurality of nodes abstracts the cross-connection information to produce sub-wavelength occupation status information. 